The effect of time headway feedback on following behaviour

The effect of time headway feedback on following behaviour

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Article ID: iaor19981268
Country: United Kingdom
Volume: 29
Issue: 3
Start Page Number: 387
End Page Number: 397
Publication Date: May 1997
Journal: Accident Analysis and Prevention
Authors: , ,
Abstract:

A field study was conducted to assess the impact of continuous time headway feedback on following behaviour. An equipped vehicle was fitted with a microwave radar connected to a head-down display. The display was supplemented by an auditory tone which sounded if headway decreased below 1 second. Sixteen subjects participated in five consecutive sessions conducted on a UK motorway. The presence of the system and the time of the journey (i.e. rush hours vs off-peak) was manipulated across the experimental sessions. Results revealed that the presence of the system reduced the proportion of time the subjects spent at low headways (e.g. <1 second). This effect was accentuated for: (a) subjects who habitually follow at shorter headways and (b) those scenarios characterised as following a lead vehicle at a constant velocity. The presence of the system increased time headway to a lead vehicle when an overtaking manoeuvre was initiated, but only in off-peak traffic. The system had no significant effect on speed-keeping behaviour or driver's mental workload.

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